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RTD Opinion

The quake: Our nuclear future

A post-earthquake tour of North Anna nuclear power station

The North Anna Nuclear power plant in Mineral, Va.


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Until Japan's catastrophic tsunami and Virginia's recent earthquake, nuclear power had been enjoying something of a renaissance. This was owing to its status as the only zero-carbon-emissions technology capable of providing reliable power on an industrial scale. The problems at Japanese reactors and the worries about U.S. ones have prompted second thoughts among erstwhile enthusiasts, and strident demands for a moratorium from those who never were convinced of nuclear power's merits in the first place.

Virginia's reactors were hit by a quake bigger than they had been designed for, with remarkably little effect. And as difficult and alarming as the explosions and radiation leaks at Japan's facilities have been, they need to be put in context. The reactors have served the Japanese people extremely well for many years. They were struck by a natural disaster of biblical proportions. And they largely withstood it. Nearly no nuclear-related casualties have been reported in Japan. That may change as time wears on, but it's worth noting that even the worst nuclear accident to date — Chernobyl — is responsible for vastly fewer lives lost than the number who have died from the production and use of fossil fuels.

The difference, of course, is that sudden disasters take lives quickly and in a spectacular fashion, while the far more numerous people who have died from the production and use of fossil fuels die singly, in ways that go unnoticed: a pipeline worker gets crushed in a machinery accident; an old woman expires of complications from an infection made worse by air pollution.

The odds that you will die in a plane crash in any given year are one in 400,000. The odds that you will die walking across the street in any given year are one in 48,500 — eight times higher. Yet countless Americans are dreadfully more afraid of entering an airplane than they are of entering a crosswalk. By the same token, people fear nuclear power when they ought to fear the lack of it.

Nuclear power boasts an astoundingly good safety record, and will continue to do so even after the events in Japan and Virginia are taken into account. Dominion Virginia Power sets a standard in this regard. It would be the height of foolishness to let the panic of the hour divert the country from a future in which nuclear power plays a much bigger part.

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View More: Chernobyl, Disaster_Accident, Environment, Japan, Machinery Accident, Pipeline Worker, Radiation, United States, Virginia Power
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